I'm so liking the looks of these!, going in my greenhouse this spring.View attachment 1002712 View attachment 1002713 View attachment 1002714 View attachment 1002714 View attachment 1002715 View attachment 1002715 View attachment 1002710 View attachment 1002707 View attachment 1002708 View attachment 1002709 View attachment 1002710 Weekly update on NL CBD as well as Yeti CBD.
Northern Lights first suffered from light stress (Autocobs too close for her liking) , followed by deficiencies... mostly Magnesium. She will not reach her full potential. Yeti is doing well, without the same problems as her HPG sister. She is several days behind and I corrected for those problems earlier.
NL CBD at 39 days in first two pictures and Yeti CBD pictures 3 and 4.
Thanks! Looking forward to some CBD and comparing these two strains. Stone was kind enough to gift me a pure CBD bean that I will be getting into soil in March. Just looking to grow and find what works.She's a beauty a picture of health and her structure is great your gonna get a nice yeilds from her
I’m sure you will get taller, bigger girls than mine. I am using a combo of Autocobs and blurple LEDs. Nothing like Alaska light! I will say that their structure is very nice. Especially the Yeti. I am really looking forward to the NL however , as it was my favorite. I’m pretty long in the tooth and had my first spliff in 1970! The old school strains speak to me.I'm so liking the looks of these!, going in my greenhouse this spring.
good work, keep doing what ya doing
I'm partial to "old school". Yeti seems like one of those strains if ya pick a big pheno and pump her up, big is what you are gonna get! I'll see, heheI’m sure you will get taller, bigger girls than mine. I am using a combo of Autocobs and blurple LEDs. Nothing like Alaska light! I will say that their structure is very nice. Especially the Yeti. I am really looking forward to the NL however , as it was my favorite. I’m pretty long in the tooth and had my first spliff in 1970! The old school strains speak to me.
Yes @Waira , I’m super happy with @StickMan ’s genetics. Really thrilled with the opportunity to grow out the CBD strains he and @tobe have worked so hard on. I’m quite privileged to be testing tobe’s new strains very soon.- lovely ladies here 'Budlady! They built up some nice bones, albeit compacted by the lights,... I had a couple that did that to me, the intensity is deceiving on COB's for sure,... funny thing this strain to strain responses, others that were right next to them stretched fine -- contrary women!
......you're in great hands with Stick's gear, Tobe too (have you seen hecno's current crop? =)
... I'm with you on fabric pots, they are key to smaller pot growing, outside especially. I have to stay 10gal or less for size restriction/stealth, which some strains clearly resent, others open up far better.... but the root balls are floor to ceiling by bloom, and as long as they stay well watered, they don't mind the tight shoes too much! Those few that do show it by having laterals grow out short, relatively few nodes, like they got going nicely, then slammed on the brakes- - ending up with that odd columnar build... Better still though than when in plastic pots!
- true dat on the breathing at the bottoms with fabric pots. I put an about a 1" layer of perlite at the base to help with that, and the outside girls ride on these plastic roller caddy's that have slots for drainage/air exchange,... for the tent I get the saucers that have contoured bottoms to get some airspace between,...
My favorite growing is outdoors, in my garden, in 5 gallon fabrics. In the heat of summer, they are on top of my garden soil also, keeping them a bit cooler and less likely to dry out too quickly. I will grow 10 Bubba Trouble amidst an equal number of tomatoes this summer. Not exactly stealth as they will likely hit the same 5 ft height. Similar nutritional needs , those tomatoes. They get the same medium and similar support throughout.I use fabric pots in the greenhouse, 3, 5, and 10. And this season doing 15 "outback". I keep my pots on the soil. I have well drained mix and have learned how to water in my greenhouse environment. When it gets hot dry and windy, yes even here, pots on soil helps conserve. when I move pots after harvest lots of small roots already exploring the underworld. Steady moisture, not too wet, not too dry, key to keeping it all flowing, no slow down. The catch, as @Waira points out, each plant has individual requirements. Gardener trains self to pay attention!:smoking: